Posted in Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Prayer Starters, Psalm 119, Quiet Time

Trust His Heart

based on Love God Greatly’s study of Psalm 119 / w2d4

Today’s Scripture: Psalm 119:41-48 / SOAP: 41-42, 45

May I experience your loyal love, O Lord,
and your deliverance, as you promised.
42 Then I will have a reply for the one who insults me,
for I trust in your word.

43 Do not completely deprive me of a truthful testimony,
for I await your justice.
44 Then I will keep your law continually
now and for all time.
45 I will be secure,
for I seek your precepts.

46 I will speak about your regulations before kings
and not be ashamed.
47 I will find delight in your commands,
which I love.
48 I will lift my hands to your commands,
which I love,
and I will meditate on your statutes.

Psalm 119:41-48 NET

The psalmist longed for expressions of God’s chesed (Hebrew for “covenant loyalty, faithful love”) in light of the persecution and hostility against him. He sought God’s salvation from oppression. The freedom offered to the person who walks according to God’s word enables him to remain strong through adversity and to maintain his focus on God’s decrees. The righteous person is courageous enough to speak of the Lord, and he will not be ashamed.

HCSB Commentary on Psalm 119:41-48

Have you ever experienced a time or even a season when it felt like God was absent? In your struggles, you search for signs of Him, a fingerprint or a whisper, something that lets you know He is near and hasn’t forgotten you. You know that God loves you and has promised deliverance. Like the psalmist, you long to feel that He is near – you want to experience His promise of deliverance; you want to feel His love and know He hasn’t forgotten you. While we don’t know for sure who wrote this Psalm and find few commentaries on the ‘story behind the scenes’, it seems to me the psalmist was dealing with these emotions. Yet, in the absence of experiencing or feeling God’s presence near, he proclaims his trust in God’s Word and announces he will find security by seeking God’s Word, or as the Holman Christian Standard Bible translates it – “focusing on God’s decrees.”

As I read through this passage and began making my observations, an old hymn flooded my mind and seemed to sum it up nicely for me. You may remember the hymn, “Trust and Obey.” Like our passage today, the song is a reminder that while troubles will come and doubts and fears will arise, and while we will undoubtedly experience sorrows and burdens from grief and loss – when we faithfully “do His good will, He abides with us still, and with all who will trust and obey.” Friends, you may not be experiencing God’s love right now, you may not be seeing His fingerprints or hearing even a whisper from Him – but to borrow from a quote I once read and from teachings throughout the Scriptures- “when you can’t see God’s hand, trust His heart.”


Not a doubt or a fear, not a sigh or a tear,
Can abide while we trust and obey.
Trust and obey, for there’s no other way
To be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.
will trust and obey.

Living Out the Journey (Application)

When we TRUST in the LORD – when we know His love and salvation – we will be able to answer those who taunt or insult us … we will walk in freedom when we are devoted to His commandments because we will not be weighed down with the sway and guilt of sin… In other words, we will be controlled by His Spirit in word and deed from the inside out, and we will know life and peace rather than a life that leads to death (Romans 8:6).

So, letting your sinful nature control your mind leads to death. But letting the Spirit control your mind leads to life and peace.

Romans 8:6 NLT

In searching out the commentaries for clarity on this portion of our journey, I ran across the following treasure from the Blue Letter Bible. I’ve shared just the portion on our soap passage – however, you can find the entire Psalm explained in “The More We Know” section at the end of this post.1

 a. Let Your mercies come…Your salvation according to Your word: Here the psalmist acknowledged that mercy and salvation come from God to man through the word of God. The word of God doesn’t merely point us toward mercy and salvation, as if it were a self-help book. It actually brings mercy and salvation to us.

  • i. The psalmist rightly said mercies, in the plural. God’s gracious mercy to us is so great that it can only be described in the plural, with mercy piled on top of mercy.
  • ii. “He desires mercy as well as teaching, for he was guilty as well as ignorant.” (Spurgeon)
    • He needed mercy, not only teaching.
    • He needed many mercies, so the request is in the plural.
    • He needed mercy from God more than from man, so the request is made to God.

b. So shall I have an answer for him who reproaches me, for I trust in Your word: Trust in God’s word provides an answer to those who reproach us. The disapproving voices we often hear can be answered by our abiding trust in the approval that we believers find in God.

  • i. When we believe who God is and what He has done for us in Jesus Christ, the disapproval of this world is answered.
Study Guide for Psalm 119 / BlueLetterBible.org (41-42)

And I will walk at liberty: Having just spoken of the obedience that comes from having God’s word within, the psalmist now testifies that this obedience brings a life of liberty. Freedom comes through obedience and submission to God.

  • i. It is proven in many lives, in both the positive and the negative: Obedience and the pursuit of God’s word and wisdom lead to liberty. Disobedience, rejection of God’s word, and reliance upon one’s own wisdom lead to bondage.
  • ii. “Saints find no bondage in sanctity. The Spirit of holiness is a free spirit; he sets men at liberty and enables them to resist every effort to bring them under subjection. The way of holiness is not a track for slaves, but the King’s highway for freemen.” (Spurgeon)
Study Guide for Psalm 119 / BlueLetterBible.org (45)
Prayer for the Journey

Father, Your Word is full of instruction and examples from those who have walked before us. The teachings and examples both warn us and encourage us, and they fill us with wisdom – that if we are wise, we will heed. We have been gifted Your Holy Spirit, and we have been promised that You will never leave or forsake us, but like the Psalmist, we find ourselves at times in places where we can not sense Your presence – help us – in these times to pray the prayer of this Psalmist: May I experience your loyal love, O Lord, and your deliverance, as you promised. Help us to know the security that comes from seeking Your Word diligently, with all our hearts – that we might not be controlled by the sinful nature but by Your Spirit. – Amen and amen!

Music for the Journey
The More We Know

F. Waw ו: Liberty comes from loving God’s word.

Posted in Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Psalm 119, Quiet Time

Looking For Contentment in all the Wrong Places

Today’s post is borrowed from the Love God Greatly blog posts for Psalm 119, w2d3

by Whitney | Jun 24, 2015 |

Perhaps one of the most challenging yet rewarding roads to spiritual health is the discipline of single-minded satisfaction on what has come from God’s hand. And the best way to safeguard your contentment in Christ is to ask the Holy Spirit to whisper Psalm 119 into your ear every now and then: “Turn my eyes away from worthless things.”  ~ Joni Eareckson-Tada

I’m usually pretty content with my life. 

That is until I see that skinny girl on the cover of a magazine.

Or I hear of someone taking a trip to the beach in the dead of winter.

Or I flip through a furniture store catalog while sitting on my scratched-up sofa.

Or it’s swimsuit season.

Heh.

It’s crazy how easily we can talk ourselves into wanting to be more, have more, and do more. And for me, it happens the most when I let the world creep in where Jesus should reside instead.

Love God Greatly- Psalm 119

We’re a Distracted People

The world is shiny and glittery-full of all kinds of stuff that competes for our attention on a daily basis. Without even thinking, we often pursue contentment through the number on the scales, the size of our homes, and the success of our earthly relationships. We turn our eyes to the world and let magazines and media alter our expectations and dictate our moods.

And often, we are let down.

“Incline my heart to your testimonies,
    and not to selfish gain!
Turn my eyes from looking at worthless things;
    and give me life in your ways.”

~ Psalm 119:36-37

Things don’t necessarily start out as worthless. They become worthless when we elevate them above Christ.

Worthless things create unnecessary competition. 

Worthless things promote unattainable perfection.

Worthless things produce selfish discontentment.

Worthless things lead us down destructive paths.

Worthless things take our worship away from Jesus.

Do you feel like something’s missing in your life? Maybe you’re looking for contentment in all the wrong places…

The Turning

I’ve heard it said that what you behold is what you become.

If we’re going to turn from worshipping worthless things, we must discipline ourselves instead to treasure Christ. 

“Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ.” ~ Philippians 3:8

Practically…

1. We learn to treasure Christ through His Word. The Bible is an incredible love story filled with redemptive truth and reminders of God’s grace and faithfulness in our lives. Spending time in God’s Word deepens our understanding of who God is, who we are, and why lasting contentment can only be found in Him.

2. We learn to treasure Christ by cultivating a heart of gratitude. When we spend time recognizing God’s compassionate hand of provision in our lives, we’re less likely to focus on the worthless things of the world. True contentment is never far from someone who rejoices always, prays continually, and gives thanks in all circumstances (1 Thess. 5:17-18).

Have you been looking for contentment in all the wrong places? There is LIFE in God’s ways.

Turn and pursue Christ today…

At his feet,

LET’S TALK: Do you have a tendency to look for contentment from the world, or through Jesus? 

Posted in Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Psalm 119, Quiet Time

Found In God’s Word

Today’s devo is borrowed from the Love God Greatly downloaded journal for Psalm 119.1

LoveGodGreatly

All people have a natural desire to be happy. This is built into us by our Maker himself. The desire to be happy is not a problem. The problem is that we tend to search for this happiness in the wrong places. We think, “If only I could be married, then I would be happy.” “If only I could have children, then I would feel fulfilled.” “If only I had money, then I would be content.” “If only I was skinny, or organized, or my own boss or well rested, THEN I would be happy.”

When searching for happiness, where should we look, and what should we pursue? The writer of Psalm 119 tells us that blessing and joy are found in God’s word. Here are 3 reasons.

1.  God is found in the Word

The words found in our Bibles are not just the ramblings of a bunch of men who decided to write down some of their history,  experiences, sayings, or sermons. Our Bible is the very word of God. He chose to speak through people, causing them to write down exactly what he wanted his people to read and know.

The Scripture goes by many names in this Psalm. It is called his law, testimonies, precepts, statutes, commandments, and rules. And for the Psalmist the law and precepts were not heavy burdens to bear, they were a delight to him  for in them he sees God.

Your testimonies are my delight;
    they are my counselors.
Ps. 119:24

In all of his word God has chosen to reveal who he is, how he operates, and how we are to live so that we can find the deepest kind of joy.

2.  The right way of living is found in God’s word

We know that living a life pleasing to God brings blessing and joy. But sometimes it is hard to know what the right way is.  How should I handle the various relationships in my life, what should my conduct be as a child of God, how should I handle my finances?

It is often said that God’s word is like a road map that shows us the way to go, the way of happy holiness.

There he will find every turn of the road, marked down, every slough and miry place pointed out, with the way to go through unsoiled; and there too, he will find light for his darkness, comfort for his weariness, and company for his loneliness.
-Spurgeon

3. Salvation is found in God’s Word

Salvation is our biggest need. We all fall short in every way because God’s standard is perfection, and we are not perfect. We don’t know God the way we should, we don’t love God’s word the way we should, and we don’t live godly lives the way we should. We need to be rescued from our sins and help to walk with God.

Jesus, who is himself called The Word of God, has known the Father perfectly, loved the ways of God perfectly,  and lives in perfect submission to the will of God. He has done what we have not. And in his death on the cross, he paid for all our failings. We can only delight in God’s word after we have been rescued by The Word.

Ultimately, the pages of our Bibles are about Christ. He is the answer to all the longings in our souls. He is the one who saves, comforts, guides, prays over us, causes us to grow, corrects us when needed, and is our ultimate source of delight and joy.

LoveGodGreatly-JenThorn

Therefore, our Bible should be our most prized earthly possession. Like the Psalmist, we need to know it, read it, meditate on it (vs. 15), and call it our delight, for that is where we find Jesus. Then joy will grow whether our lives are filled with sunshine, rain, or storms.

jen-sig

Looking To Jesus,

Posted in Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Quiet Time, Uncategorized

Joyful People

based on the Love God Greatly Study, Psalm 119, Seeking Him With All Our Heart/ w1d1

THE JOURNEY (SCRIPTURE AND OBSERVATION)

Scripture: Psalm 119:1-8 / SOAP 1-2

Joyful are people of integrity,
    who follow the instructions of the Lord.
Joyful are those who obey his laws
    and search for him with all their hearts.

They do not compromise with evil,
    and they walk only in his paths.
You have charged us
    to keep your commandments carefully.
Oh, that my actions would consistently
    reflect your decrees
!
Then I will not be ashamed
    when I compare my life with your commands.
As I learn your righteous regulations,
    I will thank you by living as I should!
I will obey your decrees.
    Please don’t give up on me!

Psalm 119:1-8 NLT

While works are not part of our salvation (Eph 2:8-10), they should play a part in our faith (Phil 2:12). As we have discovered on many of our journeys, the Christian faith is not meant to be passive. If we want to enjoy the full and satisfying life that Christ came to bring, we must be active in our faith. The Psalmist paints a clear and beautiful picture of what this means.

As we will see throughout the Psalm, the full and satisfying life requires the Word of God. However, it’s not just to be carried in our hands, laid on a table in our homes, or downloaded on our phones but hidden in our hearts and minds and part of our speech and way of life.

Why aren’t all believers joyful? Because there is a key to being filled with the joy of the Lord. The Psalmist writes that joyful people are people of integrity, meaning they are honest and have strong moral principles. Joyful people are those who obediently follow the instructions of the Lord and obey His laws. They are the people who seek after God with all their hearts; they want to know Him and model their lives after Him.

LIVING THE JOURNEY (APPLICATION)
  • live an active faith
  • search diligently for God with all of your heart
    • learn His righteous regulations
  • don’t compromise with evil
  • walk only in His paths
  • carefully keep God’s commandments
  • give Him thanks by living as you should
Question FOR THE JOURNEY
  • What is the best way to search for God?
    • How do we do this, specifically with all of our hearts?
PRAYER FOR THE JOURNEY

Father, help us – You are good and faithful. Your Word is TRUTH, and Your ways are upright. Help us to be like You. Help us to walk only in Your path and not compromise with evil. Let us live in such a way that we are not ashamed. Help us to thank You by living as we should – Holy and upright – as You have called us to. – In Jesus’ Name – amen!

THE MORE WE KNOW

What should we learn from Psalm 119?

Posted in Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Psalm 119, Quiet Time

Summer Journey – 2024

based on the Love God Greatly Study of Psalm 119

Summertime is here!!! That phrase doesn’t bring quite the excitement now as it did when I was a kid, but it still comes with a hint of excitement every year.

Longer daylight, sunshine, and summer rains replace the worry of ice and snow. There are ferns on my porches, the smell of summer grilling is in the air, and maybe even a week or two of vacation from the normal routine of living and work. Somehow, life just seems more laid back and enjoyable in the summer😊

As we embark on whatever summer routine awaits us, I invite you to continue journeying through God’s Word with me. Our summer journey will take us through Psalm 119, and it promises to be an adventure full of encouragement, wisdom, radiant light, and life-changing truths – as we discover the reflection of His character throughout the chapter.

As we prepare to open Psalm 119, “We should ask God to show us what we should believe about his Word and about himself and how we are to apply those precious truths to our own lives so that we walk away more in love with God and his Word, more aware of—and disgusted with—our sins, and more thankful and joyful because of Christ and his sacrifice.”

May be an image of text
Posted in Advent, Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Quiet Time, Triumphs over Trials

The Value of Ancient Words

based on the Love God Greatly Study, Triumph over Trials / w4d3

THE JOURNEY (SCRIPTURE AND OBSERVATION)

Scripture: 2 Peter 1:12-15 and SOAP: verse 12

Therefore, I intend to remind you constantly of these things even though you know them and are well established in the truth that you now have.

2 Peter 1:12 NET

Since I often feel like a broken record—sharing the same message over and over again—I find this verse quite encouraging. We are never so well versed in the Scriptures/Truth of God that we should cease to be reminded of them, nor should we stop reminding others of them. God’s Word is vital to our walk of faith—not just for salvation but for day-to-day living. God made this clear from the Old Testament to the New. We are to talk of them when we rise up and when we lie down; we are to teach them to our children, Deuteronomy 6:7 and 11:19. The author of Hebrews tells us to encourage one another daily … and to stir one another up to love and good deeds (Heb 3:13; 10:24-25); and the writer of Proverbs 4:20-24 placed great value on the Word, saying – “My child, pay attention to my words; listen attentively to my sayings. Do not let them depart from your sight,
guard them within your heart for they are life to those who find them and healing to one’s entire body.” Jesus Himself spoke of the value of the Word in the fourth chapter of Mark.1

Don’t be afraid to use God’s Word, both in your own life and in the lives of others – even if, like Peter -and myself – the message is repetitive.

LIVING THE JOURNEY (APPLICATION)

Talk of God’s Word when you rise up and when you lie down ( Deut 6:7)

Tell/teach them to your children (Deut 11:19)

Use them to encourage and to stir others up (Heb 3:13 and 10:25)

Go and make disciples (Mk 16:15)

Feed the sheep (Jn 21:17) – this was Peter’s primary goal – not to criticize but to encourage.

QUESTION FOR THE JOURNEY

What foundational truth has impacted your life the most? How can you pass it on to the next generation?

PRAYER FOR THE JOURNEY

Your Word, oh God, is foolishness to those who are perishing, but it is life to us who are being saved by it. Let us be faithful to read it, to study it, and to repeat it to others – both to the perishing and those who know it well. Help us to encourage one another daily with it and to remember that it is good to use it as the light it is meant to be, whether for ourselves or for those around us. Surely, it is by Your Word that we will experience triumph over our trials. For this, we praise you and say amen – in Jesus’ name.

Music for the Journey
THE MORE WE KNOW

For more insight please visit https://lovegodgreatly.com/lgg-blog/

Posted in Bible study, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Quiet Time, Set Apart - Living a Life for God's Glor

Governed by God or the World?

based on the LGG Study, Set Apart – Living a life for God’s Glory

How blessed is the one who does not follow the advice of the wicked,
or stand in the pathway with sinners,
or sit in the assembly of scoffers.
Instead he finds pleasure in obeying the Lord’s commands;
he meditates on his commands day and night.
He is like a tree planted by flowing streams;
it yields its fruit at the proper time,
and its leaves never fall off.
He succeeds in everything he attempts.

Psalm 1:1-3

Are you more influenced by God or the world? Or, to phrase it as Bibleref.com puts it – are you “governed by God” or by your “evil passions”? Our focus passage reveals the life of one who chooses to walk in the ways of God but to fully appreciate the depth of how blessed this person is we must also explore verses four through six.

The Godly

governed by God

  • Blessed
  • Pleasure
  • Meditation
  • Strong/firm
  • Fruitful
  • Successful
  • follows after God – not the wicked
  • Does not “stand with sinners”
    • “those who choose to do wrong”
  • Is not joined “with scoffers”
    • “those who mock God, or the righteous, or oppose whatever is virtuous”

The Ungodly

governed by self/evil passions

  • Wicked
  • Sinners
  • Scoffers
  • Worthless
    • “the husks of grain that are tossed into the wind and blown away”
  • Under judgment
    • “sentenced to eternal punishment”
  • Excluded from the blessing
  • Facing destruction

The choice seems like a “no-brainer” but in reality we all deal with, or at the very least have battled, the desire to follow our own passions whether they are good or bad. God’s Word makes it clear, as seen here in this Psalm, that choosing God is the far greater choice, offering benefits in this life and in the one to come, as Paul wrote to TImothy in 1 TImothy 4:8. When we choose to live under the influence of God we choose immeasurable blessing but when we choose to live under the influence of our own evil passions we are headed for destruction.

As we saw in the previous post, meditation on God’s Word is part of living under God’s influence. His Word is actually what leads to the all that the Psalmist lists as the outcome of the godly life. For it is from His Word that we know His blessings and we find pleasure, strength, fruitfulness, and success when we follow after His Word. It is His Word that protects us from the sins that seek to entangle us and from the paths we should not follow or from sitting in opposition to God’s virtuous ways.

So letting your sinful nature control your mind leads to death. But letting the Spirit control your mind leads to life and peace.

Romans 8:6

Because meditation on God’s Word is central to the application of the Godly life it is important to what meditation means in this context. It is not an emptying of the mind but rather it is a filling of the mind with Scripture,1 It requires more than a quick 15-minutes a day. Don’t get me wrong – I’m not saying a quick read of the morning or before bed or even at lunch isn’t a wonderful and profitable thing but truly filling your mind with Scripture demands more than just quickly reading or listening to it. It means thinking about it, dwelling on it, learning more about God, self, and others from it, and practicing it in all of life – in Christian surroundings or in the darkness of the world. It means Sunday to Sunday, at work, at home, in the neighborhood, with friends or family, when your kids are around and when they’re not. It means morning , noon, and night living with an awareness of the Word and living out its wisdom.

Father, help us to align our lives – our time, our company, our words, and our choices – with Your ways rather than the world’s. When we encounter the wicked surround us with Your protection but also cause Your grace and mercy to flow out from us toward them, as we remember that before You saved us – we too were numbered among them. When we are in the paths of sinners makes us lights and beacons of hope so that they might turn from their evil passions to Faith in Christ. When we find ourselves in the company of those who mock Your Word and ways may we be quick and lovingly bold with the Truth of Your Word and silence their scoffing. And Father, please guard us from attitudes of hate or unkindness toward those who follow their own passions rather than You – help us not to see ourselves as better than them but as blessed by You as the Psalmist so eloquently describes.

Walking in the Spirit or the Flesh

1Meditation defined: Worthwhile meditation does not require a person to empty his or her mind. Scripture does not support the idea of self-emptying in meditation—godly meditation means filling the mind with Scripture. To meditate on Scripture involves pondering what the Bible teaches about God’s character. It involves thinking deeply about what His Word teaches about ourselves and others. As we meditate, we cherish the promises and precepts we find in the Bible, we heed its commands, we confront our sins and confess them, and we conform our thoughts to God’s thoughts. Bibleref.org/Ps 1:2

Posted in Bible study, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Quiet Time, Set Apart - Living a Life for God's Glor

Making God’s Word A Priority

based on the LGG Study, Set Apart – Living a Life for God’s Glory / w1d1

The passage makes it clear that we cannot begin to live “Set-Apart” for Christ if we:

  • do not have a relationship with Him
  • are walking in weakness (on our own)
  • do not know and obey His Word
  • do not believe His promises

However, the passage also makes it clear how we can begin to live “Set-Apart” for Christ. God says that if we walk in His ways, “not swerving to the right or the left,” in other words not veering off His righteous path, we will prosper and know success (7). The question is how do we do this effectively while living in a world that pulls us in every direction? God makes it clear to Joshua in verse eight that the answer lies in knowing His Word, actually – he uses the phrase “meditate on it day and night.” The idea is to, as the NET version translates, “memorize” the Word – which of course means ‘to know it.’ David believed that doing this would help him not sin against God, (Ps 119:11). Paul taught the same principle to Timothy, when he encouraged him to know God’s Word so that he would be ready to use it correctly and not be swayed by false teaching, (2 Tim 2:15). If we are to obey God’s Word and correctly share God’s Word with others we must be more than familiar with it, we must know and progressively grow in our understanding of It – otherwise we will fall prey to ways that do not align with the Word of God.

I love the Old Testament passages that teach this so clearly, such as Psalm 119:9-11 and proverbs 4:20-22. These are two of the passages that reignited in me a pursuit of memorizing God’s Word more than three decades ago. As I find myself forgetting more and more these days – one of my frequent prayers has become for God to guard His Word that is hidden in my heart so that even if I forget everything and everyone else I know – I will never forget His Word – for it is my/our life-line, my/our peace and strength and hope – it is the light that guides me/us in God’s way – and it is my/our defense against sin.

Father, without You – without Your promises or knowledge of Your faithfulness we have nothing and we are hopeless. However, with You and through You we have hope and strength and peace to live the lives You have called us to. We may not lead a nation, like Joshua – but You have called us to be salt and light – to be bold with the Gospel – to make disciples – to love as You loved and serve as Christ served. Help us to walk and talk with You daily and help us to know Your Word so that we can trust Your heart. Help us to be strong and brave so that we do not turn away from Your Word and Your calling to walk in all Your ways. – In Jesus’ Name, amen!

How does saturating our hearts and minds with God’s Word help us live a set apart life and remain anchored to truth?

What are some steps you can/will take to hiding God’s Word in your heart?

Today’s LGG Blog

Memorization tools and techniques:

If you do not know Jesus as your Savior I invite you to visit the following link

Posted in Bible study, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, The Armor of God

A Pure Life

based on the LGG Study, The Armor of God / w6d5

Scripture: Psalm 119:9-16 / SOAP: verse 11

In my heart I store up your words,
so I might not sin against you.

Psalm 119:11

Oh my goodness, I love-love-love this passage. I can’t remember when I first ran across it, but I believe it was one of the first set of verses I put to memory back in the early nineties. I’ve probably said it here before, but I love passages of Scripture with straightforward, step-by-step instructions like this one.

The Psalmist asks, “How can a young person maintain a pure life?” From the same pen flows the simple but complex answer(s). Obviously, the SOAP verse is the crux of the answer: to “hide or store up God’s Word in our heart.” As we saw in the previous post, this is undoubtedly a chief means of combating the enemy in battle. Jesus is a testimony of this throughout His ministry, but very clearly in Matthew 4:1-11. However, by way of application to our everyday life we must also note all the other ways the Psalmist outlines living a pure life.

  • Living by God’s Word
  • Knowing God’s Word
  • Staying faithful to God’s Word
  • Focusing on God’s Behavior
  • Seeking God
  • Praying to God for Help
  • Praising God
  • Being taught by God
  • Delight in God’s way
  • Remember God’s instructions
  • Meditating on God’s precepts*

*Rules dictating behavior

Is Living A Pure and Holy Life Possible?

Absolutely! Everything God has called us to is possible through Him, who called us by His own glory and goodness. However, it takes intentionality and consistency in choosing God’s way over yours. Applying the criteria the Psalmist lists takes a lifetime of dying to self and daily following Christ’s steps, which is basically what Christ told the crowd in the ninth chapter of Luke when He said: “If anyone wants to become my follower, he must deny himself, take up his cross daily, and follow me.” When this is how we choose to live, when we intentionally and consistently choose God’s way over the world’s, we will find ourselves living the pure and holy life the Psalmist sought after and that God has called us to live.

God has already made us holy in Christ. He has already set us apart and saved us. Now he calls us to make choices that reflect who we already are.

Commentary on 1 Peter 1:15-16 / Bibleref.org – See Going Further in the Journey
Prayer of Response to God’s Word

Father, You have called us to be holy as You are holy. This can seem an overwhelming demand upon our life until we also remember that Your servant Peter said that You have empowered us to be all that You have called us to be. We are able to be set apart and holy because through Christ You have made us new creations – the old has gone and the new is here. Help us to live up to what You created us to be. Help us to live lives that are set apart from the world, lives that reflect You and not the world. Help us to die to self and live for You, to follow in the ways of Christ our Lord and Savior. Help us to remember that we are Yours and have been set apart for You. Help us to be hungry for your Word, to hide it in our heart so that we might not sin against You. Help us to stay faithful to Your Word that it might dictate our behavior. In this You will be glorified as we live as Your representatives in Christ – in Whose name I pray – Amen and amen!

Reflecting on the Journey

What role does God’s Word play in our lives, and what impact does it have?

Going Further in the Journey

but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, 1 Peter 1:15

since it is written, “You shall be holy, for I am holy.”

Posted in Bible study, From Broken to Restored, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Quiet Time

Let’s Rebuild

based on the Love God Greatly study, From Broken to Restored / w1d4

Scripture: Nehemiah 2:9-20 / SOAP verse 18

Then I related to them how the good hand of my God was on me and what the king had said to me. Then they replied, “Let’s begin rebuilding right away!” So they readied themselves for this good project.

Nehemiah 2:18

Remember in our last reading the King of Persia gave Nehemiah the go ahead on traveling to Jerusalem to rebuild the city.

So the king asked me, “Why are you looking so sad? You don’t look sick to me. You must be deeply troubled.”

Then I was terrified, but I replied, “Long live the king! How can I not be sad? For the city where my ancestors are buried is in ruins, and the gates have been destroyed by fire.”

The king asked, “Well, how can I help you?”

With a prayer to the God of heaven, I replied, “If it please the king, and if you are pleased with me, your servant, send me to Judah to rebuild the city where my ancestors are buried.”

The king, with the queen sitting beside him, asked, “How long will you be gone? When will you return?” After I told him how long I would be gone, the king agreed to my request.

Nehemiah 2:2-6

In today’s passage (2:9-20) Nehemiah has arrived and inspected the walls, after which he made it known to the officials, the Jews, the priests, the nobles, and the workers what he had been doing. He urged them to join him in rebuilding the walls so that Jerusalem would no longer bear such disgrace and criticism. Nehemiah told them how God’s hand was on him and about the King’s approval for his mission. His encouragement to rebuild was meant with great and eager enthusiasm of the people. However, the enemies of the Jews were not quite as receptive. The beauty and example for us is that Nehemiah paid no attention to them but sought and followed God faithfully.

Nehemiah sought God and followed through with purpose and a plan to do it right – rather than bowing to the demands of man.

Consider This Application

We have all been given a calling. The work of the gospel is before us. As followers of Christ, we are to take the gospel to the world and make disciples of all nations. We are working with God to rebuild the brokenness that is in the world because of sin. When we bring the gospel into dark places, when we share the truth of who Jesus is with others, we are engaging in this good project. The planning and preparation have already been done, and, like Nehemiah rallied the people, Jesus calls us to join Him in this important work. may we be faithful to ready ourselves and engage in this good work!

Love God Greatly Devotion / From Broken to Restored / w1d4
Prayerful Response to God’s Word

Father, again I pray that You will help strengthen us to be fully engaged in mind, heart, and action. May we be dedicated to the calling to “take the gospel”, to be Your instruments of peace and light in the dark places of this world, to share the truth of who Jesus is with others, and work with You to “rebuild the brokenness that is in the world because of sin.” Jesus has called us to join Him, may we “faithfully prepare to engage in this good work!” – Amen and Amen!!